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> I could see people getting together to form a non-profit foundation that could at least pay for a few guys to continue to work on Go full-time.

It's not going to happen, for the same reason the biggest startups in the Silicon Valley never came together to write their own language before. Let's get things straight, the only people who control Go is the Go team period. You are not talking about facts, so i'm not sure what is the point of your comment.



The point I was trying to make is that the golang community has a lot of respect for the current core team. If the community didn't have that respect, then I speculate that there would be a fork (or takeover), and it would then look more like the kind of community-controlled project that you seem to prefer.

This kind of thing has happened in the past: XFree86, OpenOffice, gcc, etc.




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